American Decades
Patterson, Frederick Douglas 1901-1988
COLLEGE PRESIDENT, FOUNDER OF THE UNITED NEGRO COLLEGE FUND
President at Tuskegee.
In 1935 Frederick Douglas Patterson became president of Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, one of the foremost African American institutions of higher education in the country. His stated purpose at the time of his inauguration was not only to increase the vocational training of his students but also to raise them to higher levels of academic competency and thus make them more qualified wage earners. He is also remembered for his creation in 1943 of the United Negro College Fund, an organization dedicated to raising and distributing scholarships to deserving minority students.
School Lunches.
After adding courses on the principles of nutrition and dietetics to the curriculum of Tuskegee, Patterson oversaw the adoption and growth of the federally sponsored school-lunch program. He felt that this program must be expanded...
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1940's Education
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Academic Freedom
- American Education Abroad
- The Core Curriculum and the Great Books Project
- Federal Aid
- Gi Bill of Rights
- High-School Curriculum
- Problems in Higher Education
- Research and Educational Sociology
- Secularization of Public Education
- Segregation in the Schools
- Teacher Shortages and Strikes
- Women in Education
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1940–1949
